Basic Usage of Pipenv

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This document covers some of Pipenv’s more basic features.

☤ Example Pipfile & Pipfile.lock

Pipfiles contain information for the dependencies of the project, and supersedes the requirements.txt file used in most Python projects. You should add a Pipfile in the Git repository. The only thing required for users who clone the repository would be installing Pipenv in the machine and typing pipenv install. Pipenv is a reference implementation for using Pipfile.

Here is a simple example of a Pipfile and the resulting Pipfile.lock.

Example Pipfile

[[source]]
url = "https://pypi.python.org/simple"
verify_ssl = true
name = "pypi"

[packages]
requests = "*"


[dev-packages]
pytest = "*"

Example Pipfile.lock

{
    "_meta": {
        "hash": {
            "sha256": "8d14434df45e0ef884d6c3f6e8048ba72335637a8631cc44792f52fd20b6f97a"
        },
        "host-environment-markers": {
            "implementation_name": "cpython",
            "implementation_version": "3.6.1",
            "os_name": "posix",
            "platform_machine": "x86_64",
            "platform_python_implementation": "CPython",
            "platform_release": "16.7.0",
            "platform_system": "Darwin",
            "platform_version": "Darwin Kernel Version 16.7.0: Thu Jun 15 17:36:27 PDT 2017; root:xnu-3789.70.16~2/RELEASE_X86_64",
            "python_full_version": "3.6.1",
            "python_version": "3.6",
            "sys_platform": "darwin"
        },
        "pipfile-spec": 5,
        "requires": {},
        "sources": [
            {
                "name": "pypi",
                "url": "https://pypi.python.org/simple",
                "verify_ssl": true
            }
        ]
    },
    "default": {
        "certifi": {
            "hashes": [
                "sha256:54a07c09c586b0e4c619f02a5e94e36619da8e2b053e20f594348c0611803704",
                "sha256:40523d2efb60523e113b44602298f0960e900388cf3bb6043f645cf57ea9e3f5"
            ],
            "version": "==2017.7.27.1"
        },
        "chardet": {
            "hashes": [
                "sha256:fc323ffcaeaed0e0a02bf4d117757b98aed530d9ed4531e3e15460124c106691",
                "sha256:84ab92ed1c4d4f16916e05906b6b75a6c0fb5db821cc65e70cbd64a3e2a5eaae"
            ],
            "version": "==3.0.4"
        },
        "idna": {
            "hashes": [
                "sha256:8c7309c718f94b3a625cb648ace320157ad16ff131ae0af362c9f21b80ef6ec4",
                "sha256:2c6a5de3089009e3da7c5dde64a141dbc8551d5b7f6cf4ed7c2568d0cc520a8f"
            ],
            "version": "==2.6"
        },
        "requests": {
            "hashes": [
                "sha256:6a1b267aa90cac58ac3a765d067950e7dbbf75b1da07e895d1f594193a40a38b",
                "sha256:9c443e7324ba5b85070c4a818ade28bfabedf16ea10206da1132edaa6dda237e"
            ],
            "version": "==2.18.4"
        },
        "urllib3": {
            "hashes": [
                "sha256:06330f386d6e4b195fbfc736b297f58c5a892e4440e54d294d7004e3a9bbea1b",
                "sha256:cc44da8e1145637334317feebd728bd869a35285b93cbb4cca2577da7e62db4f"
            ],
            "version": "==1.22"
        }
    },
    "develop": {
        "py": {
            "hashes": [
                "sha256:2ccb79b01769d99115aa600d7eed99f524bf752bba8f041dc1c184853514655a",
                "sha256:0f2d585d22050e90c7d293b6451c83db097df77871974d90efd5a30dc12fcde3"
            ],
            "version": "==1.4.34"
        },
        "pytest": {
            "hashes": [
                "sha256:b84f554f8ddc23add65c411bf112b2d88e2489fd45f753b1cae5936358bdf314",
                "sha256:f46e49e0340a532764991c498244a60e3a37d7424a532b3ff1a6a7653f1a403a"
            ],
            "version": "==3.2.2"
        }
    }
}

☤ General Recommendations & Version Control

  • Generally, keep both Pipfile and Pipfile.lock in version control.

  • Do not keep Pipfile.lock in version control if multiple versions of Python are being targeted.

  • Specify your target Python version in your Pipfile’s [requires] section. Ideally, you should only have one target Python version, as this is a deployment tool. python_version should be in the format X.Y (or X) and python_full_version should be in X.Y.Z format.

  • pipenv install is fully compatible with pip install syntax, for which the full documentation can be found here.

  • Note that the Pipfile uses the TOML Spec.

☤ Example Pipenv Workflow

Clone / create project repository:

$ cd myproject

Install from Pipfile, if there is one:

$ pipenv install

Or, add a package to your new project:

$ pipenv install <package>

This will create a Pipfile if one doesn’t exist. If one does exist, it will automatically be edited with the new package you provided.

Next, activate the Pipenv shell:

$ pipenv shell
$ python --version

This will spawn a new shell subprocess, which can be deactivated by using exit.

☤ Example Pipenv Upgrade Workflow

  • Find out what’s changed upstream: $ pipenv update --outdated.

  • Upgrade packages, two options:
    1. Want to upgrade everything? Just do $ pipenv update.

    2. Want to upgrade packages one-at-a-time? $ pipenv update <pkg> for each outdated package.

☤ Importing from requirements.txt

If you only have a requirements.txt file available when running pipenv install, pipenv will automatically import the contents of this file and create a Pipfile for you.

You can also specify $ pipenv install -r path/to/requirements.txt to import a requirements file.

If your requirements file has version numbers pinned, you’ll likely want to edit the new Pipfile to remove those, and let pipenv keep track of pinning. If you want to keep the pinned versions in your Pipfile.lock for now, run pipenv lock --keep-outdated. Make sure to upgrade soon!

☤ Specifying Versions of a Package

You can specify versions of a package using the Semantic Versioning scheme (i.e. major.minor.micro).

For example, to install requests you can use:

$ pipenv install requests~=1.2

Pipenv will install version 1.2 and any minor update, but not 2.0.

This will update your Pipfile to reflect this requirement, automatically.

In general, Pipenv uses the same specifier format as pip. However, note that according to PEP 440 , you can’t use versions containing a hyphen or a plus sign.

To make inclusive or exclusive version comparisons you can use:

$ pipenv install "requests>=1.4"   # will install a version equal or larger than 1.4.0
$ pipenv install "requests<=2.13"  # will install a version equal or lower than 2.13.0
$ pipenv install "requests>2.19"   # will install 2.19.1 but not 2.19.0

Note

The use of double quotes around the package and version specification (i.e. "requests>2.19") is highly recommended to avoid issues with Input and output redirection in Unix-based operating systems.

The use of ~= is preferred over the == identifier as the latter prevents pipenv from updating the packages:

$ pipenv install "requests~=2.2"  # locks the major version of the package (this is equivalent to using >=2.2, ==2.*)

To avoid installing a specific version you can use the != identifier.

For an in depth explanation of the valid identifiers and more complex use cases check the relevant section of PEP-440.

☤ Specifying Versions of Python

To create a new virtualenv, using a specific version of Python you have installed (and on your PATH), use the --python VERSION flag, like so:

Use Python 3:

$ pipenv --python 3

Use Python3.6:

$ pipenv --python 3.6

Use Python 2.7.14:

$ pipenv --python 2.7.14

When given a Python version, like this, Pipenv will automatically scan your system for a Python that matches that given version.

If a Pipfile hasn’t been created yet, one will be created for you, that looks like this:

[[source]]
url = "https://pypi.python.org/simple"
verify_ssl = true

[dev-packages]

[packages]

[requires]
python_version = "3.6"

Note

The inclusion of [requires] python_version = "3.6" specifies that your application requires this version of Python, and will be used automatically when running pipenv install against this Pipfile in the future (e.g. on other machines). If this is not true, feel free to simply remove this section.

If you don’t specify a Python version on the command–line, either the [requires] python_full_version or python_version will be selected automatically, falling back to whatever your system’s default python installation is, at time of execution.

☤ Editable Dependencies (e.g. -e . )

You can tell Pipenv to install a path as editable — often this is useful for the current working directory when working on packages:

$ pipenv install --dev -e .

$ cat Pipfile
...
[dev-packages]
"e1839a8" = {path = ".", editable = true}
...

Note

All sub-dependencies will get added to the Pipfile.lock as well. Sub-dependencies are not added to the Pipfile.lock if you leave the -e option out.

☤ Specifying Package Categories

Originally pipenv supported only two package groups: packages and dev-packages in the Pipfile which mapped to default and develop in the Pipfile.lock. Support for additional named categories has been added such that arbitrary named groups can utilized across the available pipenv commands.

Note

The name will be the same between Pipfile and lock file, however to support the legacy naming convention it is not possible to have an additional group named default or develop in the Pipfile.

By default pipenv lock will lock all known package categorises; to specify locking only specific groups use the --categories argument. The command should process the package groups in the order specified.

Example usages:

# single category
pipenv install six --catetgories prereq

# multiple categories
pipenv sync --categories="prereq packages"

# lock and uninstall examples
pipenv lock --categories="prereq dev-packages"
pipenv uninstall six --categories prereq

Note

The packages/default specifiers are used to constrain all other categories just as they have done for dev-packages/develop category. However this is the only way constraints are applied – the presence of other named groups do not constraint each other, which means it is possible to define conflicting package versions across groups. This may be desired in some use cases where users only are installing groups specific to their system platform.

☤ Environment Management with Pipenv

The three primary commands you’ll use in managing your pipenv environment are $ pipenv install, $ pipenv uninstall, and $ pipenv lock.

$ pipenv install

$ pipenv install is used for installing packages into the pipenv virtual environment and updating your Pipfile.

Along with the basic install command, which takes the form:

$ pipenv install [package names]

The user can provide these additional parameters:

  • --three — Performs the installation in a virtualenv using the system python3 link.

  • --python — Performs the installation in a virtualenv using the provided Python interpreter.

Warning

None of the above commands should be used together. They are also destructive and will delete your current virtualenv before replacing it with an appropriately versioned one.

  • --dev — Install both develop and default packages from Pipfile.

  • --system — Use the system pip command rather than the one from your virtualenv.

  • --deploy — Make sure the packages are properly locked in Pipfile.lock, and abort if the lock file is out-of-date.

  • --ignore-pipfile — Ignore the Pipfile and install from the Pipfile.lock.

  • --skip-lock — Ignore the Pipfile.lock and install from the Pipfile. In addition, do not write out a Pipfile.lock reflecting changes to the Pipfile.

$ pipenv uninstall

$ pipenv uninstall supports all of the parameters in pipenv install, as well as two additional options, --all and --all-dev.

  • --all — This parameter will purge all files from the virtual environment, but leave the Pipfile untouched.

  • --all-dev — This parameter will remove all of the development packages from the virtual environment, and remove them from the Pipfile.

$ pipenv lock

$ pipenv lock is used to create a Pipfile.lock, which declares all dependencies (and sub-dependencies) of your project, their latest available versions, and the current hashes for the downloaded files. This ensures repeatable, and most importantly deterministic, builds.

☤ About Shell Configuration

Shells are typically misconfigured for subshell use, so $ pipenv shell --fancy may produce unexpected results. If this is the case, try $ pipenv shell, which uses “compatibility mode”, and will attempt to spawn a subshell despite misconfiguration.

A proper shell configuration only sets environment variables like PATH during a login session, not during every subshell spawn (as they are typically configured to do). In fish, this looks like this:

if status --is-login
    set -gx PATH /usr/local/bin $PATH
end

You should do this for your shell too, in your ~/.profile or ~/.bashrc or wherever appropriate.

Note

The shell launched in interactive mode. This means that if your shell reads its configuration from a specific file for interactive mode (e.g. bash by default looks for a ~/.bashrc configuration file for interactive mode), then you’ll need to modify (or create) this file.

If you experience issues with $ pipenv shell, just check the PIPENV_SHELL environment variable, which $ pipenv shell will use if available. For detail, see ☤ Configuration With Environment Variables.

☤ A Note about VCS Dependencies

You can install packages with pipenv from git and other version control systems using URLs formatted according to the following rule:

<vcs_type>+<scheme>://<location>/<user_or_organization>/<repository>@<branch_or_tag>#egg=<package_name>

The only optional section is the @<branch_or_tag> section. When using git over SSH, you may use the shorthand vcs and scheme alias git+git@<location>:<user_or_organization>/<repository>@<branch_or_tag>#egg=<package_name>. Note that this is translated to git+ssh://git@<location> when parsed.

Note that it is strongly recommended that you install any version-controlled dependencies in editable mode, using pipenv install -e, in order to ensure that dependency resolution can be performed with an up-to-date copy of the repository each time it is performed, and that it includes all known dependencies.

Below is an example usage which installs the git repository located at https://github.com/requests/requests.git from tag v2.20.1 as package name requests:

$ pipenv install -e git+https://github.com/requests/requests.git@v2.20.1#egg=requests
Creating a Pipfile for this project...
Installing -e git+https://github.com/requests/requests.git@v2.20.1#egg=requests...
[...snipped...]
Adding -e git+https://github.com/requests/requests.git@v2.20.1#egg=requests to Pipfile's [packages]...
[...]

$ cat Pipfile
[packages]
requests = {git = "https://github.com/requests/requests.git", editable = true, ref = "v2.20.1"}

Valid values for <vcs_type> include git, bzr, svn, and hg. Valid values for <scheme> include http, https, ssh, and file. In specific cases you also have access to other schemes: svn may be combined with svn as a scheme, and bzr can be combined with sftp and lp.

You can read more about pip’s implementation of VCS support here. For more information about other options available when specifying VCS dependencies, please check the Pipfile spec.

☤ Pipfile.lock Security Features

Pipfile.lock takes advantage of some great new security improvements in pip. By default, the Pipfile.lock will be generated with the sha256 hashes of each downloaded package. This will allow pip to guarantee you’re installing what you intend to when on a compromised network, or downloading dependencies from an untrusted PyPI endpoint.

We highly recommend approaching deployments with promoting projects from a development environment into production. You can use pipenv lock to compile your dependencies on your development environment and deploy the compiled Pipfile.lock to all of your production environments for reproducible builds.

Note

If you’d like a requirements.txt output of the lockfile, run $ pipenv requirements.

☤ Pipenv and Docker Containers

In general, you should not have Pipenv inside a linux container image, since it is a build tool. If you want to use it to build, and install the run time dependencies for your application, you can use a multistage build for creating a virtual environment with your dependencies. In this approach, Pipenv in installed in the base layer, it is then used to create the virtual environment. In a later stage, in a runtime layer the virtual environment is copied from the base layer, the layer containing pipenv and other build dependencies is discarded. This results in a smaller image, which can still run your application. Here is an example Dockerfile, which you can use as a starting point for doing a multistage build for your application:

FROM docker.io/python:3.9 AS builder

RUN pip install --user pipenv

# Tell pipenv to create venv in the current directory
ENV PIPENV_VENV_IN_PROJECT=1

# Pipfile contains requests
ADD Pipfile.lock Pipfile /usr/src/

WORKDIR /usr/src

# NOTE: If you install binary packages required for a python module, you need
# to install them again in the runtime. For example, if you need to install pycurl
# you need to have pycurl build dependencies libcurl4-gnutls-dev and libcurl3-gnutls
# In the runtime container you need only libcurl3-gnutls

# RUN apt install -y libcurl3-gnutls libcurl4-gnutls-dev

RUN /root/.local/bin/pipenv sync

RUN /usr/src/.venv/bin/python -c "import requests; print(requests.__version__)"

FROM docker.io/python:3.9 AS runtime

RUN mkdir -v /usr/src/.venv

COPY --from=builder /usr/src/.venv/ /usr/src/.venv/

RUN /usr/src/.venv/bin/python -c "import requests; print(requests.__version__)"

# HERE GOES ANY CODE YOU NEED TO ADD TO CREATE YOUR APPLICATION'S IMAGE
# For example
# RUN apt install -y libcurl3-gnutls
# RUN adduser --uid 123123 coolio
# ADD run.py /usr/src/

WORKDIR /usr/src/

USER coolio

CMD ["./.venv/bin/python", "-m", "run.py"]

Note

Pipenv is not meant to run as root. However, in the multistage build above it is done nevertheless. A calculated risk, since the intermediate image is discarded. The runtime image later shows that you should create a user and user it to run your application. Once again, you should not run pipenv as root (or Admin on Windows) normally. This could lead to breakage of your Python installation, or even your complete OS.

When you build an image with this example (assuming requests is found in Pipfile), you will see that requests is installed in the runtime image:

$ sudo docker build --no-cache -t oz/123:0.1 .
Sending build context to Docker daemon  1.122MB
Step 1/12 : FROM docker.io/python:3.9 AS builder
 ---> 81f391f1a7d7
Step 2/12 : RUN pip install --user pipenv
 ---> Running in b83ed3c28448
 ... trimmed ...
 ---> 848743eb8c65
Step 4/12 : ENV PIPENV_VENV_IN_PROJECT=1
 ---> Running in 814e6f5fec5b
Removing intermediate container 814e6f5fec5b
 ---> 20167b4a13e1
Step 5/12 : ADD Pipfile.lock Pipfile /usr/src/
 ---> c7632cb3d5bd
Step 6/12 : WORKDIR /usr/src
 ---> Running in 1d75c6cfce10
Removing intermediate container 1d75c6cfce10
 ---> 2dcae54cc2e5
Step 7/12 : RUN /root/.local/bin/pipenv sync
 ---> Running in 1a00b326b1ee
Creating a virtualenv for this project...
... trimmed ...
✔ Successfully created virtual environment!
Virtualenv location: /usr/src/.venv
Installing dependencies from Pipfile.lock (fe5a22)...
... trimmed ...
Step 8/12 : RUN /usr/src/.venv/bin/python -c "import requests; print(requests.__version__)"
 ---> Running in 3a66e3ce4a11
2.27.1
Removing intermediate container 3a66e3ce4a11
 ---> 1db657d0ac17
Step 9/12 : FROM docker.io/python:3.9 AS runtime
... trimmed ...
Step 12/12 : RUN /usr/src/venv/bin/python -c "import requests; print(requests.__version__)"
 ---> Running in fa39ba4080c5
2.27.1
Removing intermediate container fa39ba4080c5
 ---> 2b1c90fd414e
Successfully built 2b1c90fd414e
Successfully tagged oz/123:0.1